HM Treasury

Government response to the Law Commission recommendations on Bills of Sale

Baroness Neville-Rolfe: My honourable friend The Economic Secretary to the Treasury (Simon Kirby) has today made the following Written Ministerial Statement.In 2014, HM Treasury asked the Law Commission to review the Victorian-era Bills of Sale Acts. This legislation enables consumers and small businesses to borrow money using their goods as security, whilst allowing borrowers to retain possession of the goods. In recent years, bills of sale have been most commonly used in relation to logbook loans, which are loans that are secured on a consumer’s vehicle. The desire for a comprehensive review reflected the government’s significant concerns about consumer detriment in the logbook loan market, in particular the lack of protections available to consumers who took out a logbook loan, as well as innocent third party purchasers who unknowingly buy a vehicle that is subject to a logbook loan. In 2014, the government also fundamentally reformed the consumer credit market, by transferring regulation from the Office of Fair Trading to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). This more robust regulatory system is helping to deliver the government’s vision for a well functioning and sustainable consumer credit market which is able to meet consumers’ needs. The government has ensured that the FCA has strong powers to protect consumers, including the power to levy unlimited fines and require firms to compensate consumers who have lost out, where it finds wrongdoing. The FCA assesses every firm’s fitness to trade as part of the authorisation process, and it has put in place binding standards on firms. It proactively monitors the market, focusing on the areas most likely to cause consumer harm, and it has a broad enforcement toolkit to punish breaches of its rules . This has ensured that firms treat consumers fairly and consumers are better protected from sharp practice by firms. However, the FCA cannot tackle the inadequacies of the Bills of Sale Acts, which mean that there are still significant gaps in the protection available for consumers who use logbook loans and third party purchasers. The Law Commission’s final report and recommendations to reform the Bills of Sale Acts were published in September 2016, and the government has now had the opportunity to consider the report fully. The government is grateful to the Law Commission for a report which is exhaustive and careful in its treatment of this complex matter, and which makes detailed recommendations for reform. The government agrees with the Law Commission’s conclusion that consumers and unincorporated businesses should continue to be able to use their existing goods as security while retaining possession of them but that the Bills of Sale Acts no longer provide an appropriate legal framework and should be reformed. As well as accepting the overarching thrust of the recommendations, the government welcomes many of the detailed suggestions for reform. There are, however, some recommendations where the government’s acceptance is qualified. We will want to reflect further on these points, and take discussions forward with the Law Commission, stakeholders and other government Departments. This as an opportunity for the government to continue its work in creating a modern, fit for purpose consumer credit regime. The recommendations will improve outcomes for consumers by simplifying the information that is presented to them and providing increased protections if they get into financial difficulty. The recommendations will also remove unnecessary burdens for firms, and create new opportunities for small, unincorporated businesses to access finance. Copies of the government’s full response to the Report’s recommendations will be placed in the libraries of the House once these have been fully considered and agreed with the Law Commission. The government is keen that this work should move forward, and has agreed to support the Law Commission in drafting primary legislation to enact the necessary reforms. The government will seek to use the special Parliamentary procedure which is available for Bills that implement uncontroversial Law Commission recommendations, subject to agreement with the Usual Channels, and to bring forward the legislation when Parliamentary time allows. The Law Commission’s final report is available at: http://www.lawcom.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/lc369_bills_of_sale.pdf 


This statement has also been made in the House of Commons: 
HCWS462

Home Office

Fire reform

Baroness Williams of Trafford: My rt hon Friend the Minister of State for Fire and Policing (Brandon Lewis) has today made the following Written Ministerial Statement:I want to update the House on progress made since the Prime Minister, as then Home Secretary, set out plans last May to reform the fire and rescue service in England to become more accountable, efficient and professional than ever before.Services are already transforming and seizing opportunities for collaboration, for example, delivering a single suite of national operational guidance, creating a single, cross service research and development function and developing a cross service new commercial strategy. The service has also recently formed the National Fire Chiefs' Council which will transform the operational voice of fire and rescue services.Our reform agenda is based around three distinct pillars: efficiency and collaboration, accountability and transparency, and workforce reform.The Government has legislated through the Policing and Crime Act 2017 to transform local fire and rescue governance, enabling police and crime commissioners to become the fire and rescue authority where a strong local case is made. The Act also creates a statutory duty to collaborate. Better joint working can strengthen our emergency services, deliver significant savings to the taxpayer and – most importantly – enable them to better protect the public. This new duty requires emergency services to keep collaboration opportunities under review and to take on collaboration opportunities where it would be in the interests of efficiency and effectiveness to do so. It will come into force in April.While fire and rescue authorities have achieved significant savings to date, I believe they can go further. Last year I undertook a basket of goods exercise to ascertain the prices each fire and rescue authority pays for a basket of twenty-five common items. The exercise illustrated that procurement practices need to be improved and so the Home Office has supported the sector develop a new commercial approach to aggregate and standardise procurement. This exercise will be repeated in the Autumn to ensure progress is being made and a separate exercise will be undertaken this spring on different, high spend items.I will create an independent inspectorate and am considering options. I want this inspectorate to be rigorous in application and forensic in process, to deliver rounded and comprehensive inspections to assess the operational effectiveness and efficiency of each service. This independent scrutiny will ensure that fire authorities are held to the highest possible standards. I will update the House in due course as this body is formed.Transparency of fire and rescue services increased last year by the publication of new procurement and workforce diversity data and will be strengthened further by the creation of a new website that will hold a range of information, in one place, about services. This will include information such as chief officer pay, expenditure and workforce composition and further information is planned.I will create a professional standards body to further professionalise the service. The Home Office is working with the sector to develop options for this body which I hope will form later this year. I propose this body to set standards on a range of issues such as leadership, workforce development, equality and diversity and codifying effective practice.Finally, I published the independent review into firefighter terms and conditions by Adrian Thomas in November. The review's recommendations, if implemented, will secure the future of the service for years to come by creating a diverse working environment free from bullying and harassment, with strong leadership and more flexible working conditions. I am encouraged that the Local Government Association, in partnership with the sector, recognise the need to take swift action in response to this report and deliver vital reforms to the workforce. I expect the recommendations of the review to be followed, particularly in relation to reforming the National Joint Council and the Grey Book, and I will be closely monitoring progress.I also expect services to step up and find solutions to the current lack of diversity so clearly highlighted in the workforce statistics we published last year, with just 4% of firefighters from an ethnic minority background and just 5% female.Delivering this ambitious reform agenda does not simply rest with me, or with the Government. Ultimately, the sector itself must shape and deliver these changes. It is for their benefit and the benefit of the communities they serve, and I look forward to seeing the results.


This statement has also been made in the House of Commons: 
HCWS464